Why AI-Generated Occult Books Are a Fool’s Path to Ruin

 


I’ve been noticing an alarming trend on Amazon Kindle: a flood of low-quality, plagiarized occult books — often produced by people hiding behind pseudonyms, whether they’re in India, Morocco, or anywhere else. Many of these so-called “authors” aren’t practitioners at all, but fake witches churning out texts with AI tools like Designrr or Automateed.

The result? Books with 40 or 50 filler “chapters,” pages of repeated paragraphs, and zero real substance. On YouTube, the problem is even worse — self-proclaimed “experts” claim you can make thousands selling occult books, urging curious beginners to crank out AI-generated eBooks as a get-rich-quick scheme. This is pure nonsense.

Here’s the truth:

No one gets rich through occultism. My own eBooks are priced affordably — usually $9 — and Amazon takes a 40% commission. That leaves me with just 60% of each sale. I write because it’s my craft and my calling, not because I expect instant wealth.

If you’re only curious about the occult but lack real knowledge, using AI generators to “write” books will backfire — fast. Here’s why:

Readers know the difference. Many occult readers are serious students. They can spot AI-generated fluff within minutes. Once they do, they’ll leave negative reviews that will kill your sales.

Amazon flags low-content books. Their algorithms will push your eBook into obscurity.

You won’t be able to answer questions. When genuine readers email you about your work, you’ll be exposed as a fraud if you can’t respond with expertise. The façade will crumble quickly, and your “career” will end before it begins.

Still tempted to write garbage with AI or buy PLR eBooks and just swap the cover?

Think twice. The occult deserves respect — and readers can smell a fraud a mile away.

Asamod ka




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